While the internet was obsessing over that rectangular iceberg, some more disconcerting icy behavior went down on the other side of the Antarctic.

The Pine Island Glacier has been breaking off monstrous icebergs over the past five years, presenting a worrying sign that the West Antarctic is destabilizing. The latest occurred this weekend. Satellite imagery shows an iceberg roughly 115 square miles—five times the size of Manhattan—breaking off the front of the glacier. In comparison, TU Delft remote sensing expert Stef Lhermitte told Earther the tabular iceberg of viral internet fame is likely less than one square mile. Wake up, sheeple.

“What is mostly remarkable about this event is that the frequency of calving seems to increase,” Lhermitte said about the big boy ‘berg that broke off Pine Island Glacier. In the 2000s, so-called iceberg calving events of this magnitude used to occur roughly every five years. But since 2013, there have been four calving events including one last year.

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Icebergs break off the front of glaciers on the regular because glaciers are giant rivers of ice. As the upstream ice flows toward the sea, it puts tremendous stress on the ice below, causing icebergs to snap off.

But what’s been happening at Pine Island Glacier in recent years could be a sign the flow is increasing. Satellite imagery put together by Lhermitte shows that the calving front has slowly receded for decades before beginning a sharp recession in recent years, including 3 miles of shrinkage since 2015 alone.

If the disintegration continues, there’s concerns it could lead to something call marine ice cliff instability, where the walls of ice at the calving front get progressively taller due to the downward slope of the bedrock beneath it. This is expected to make the remaining ice more wobbly, like an ever-growing Jenga tower, and it could lead to an even more rapid breakup of glaciers that causes sea level rise to spike.

“Changes at PIG in terms of mass loss and ice shelf retreat are perhaps more important for future sea level rise as the PIG (and Thwaites) region is one of the potential hot spots for future mass loss from Antarctica,” Lhermitte said, referring to the glacier by its acronym as well as Thwaites, its next door neighbor.